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Science

Nuclear Testing Helps Identify Fake Vintage Whiskey 366

Hugh Pickens writes "Industry experts claim the market for vintage whiskey has been flooded with fakes that purport to be several hundred years old but instead contain worthless spirit made just a few years ago. Now researchers at the Oxford Radiocarbon Accelerator Unit have developed a method that can pinpoint the date a whiskey was made by detecting traces of radioactive particles created by nuclear bomb tests in the 1950s. '"It is easy to tell if whiskey is fake as if it has been produced since the middle of the twentieth century, it has a very distinctive signature," says Dr. Tom Higham, deputy director of the facility. Nuclear bomb testing in the 1950s saw levels of carbon-14 in the atmosphere rise around the world so the amount of isotope absorbed by living organisms since this time has been artificially elevated. Whiskey extracted from antique bottles is sent to the laboratory where scientists burn the liquid and bombard the resulting gas with electrically charged particles so they can measure the carbon-14 in the sample. In one recent case, a bottle of 1856 Macallan Rare Reserve was withdrawn from auction at Christies, where it was expected to sell for up to £20,000, after the scientists found it had actually been produced in 1950. "So far there have probably been more fakes among the samples we've tested than real examples of old whiskey," says Higham.'"

Comment Do-over (Score 4, Interesting) 238

How much would it cost to rip up the ground and lay down more fiber? It seems like in most cases, a (natural?) monopoly results. When things get this bad, is there any chance that a new generation of telecommunications companies can spring up (perhaps with government subsidies to get them going)?

Comment What could have been done? (Score 1) 485

Suppose the earthquake's precise location and time were known -- what then? Would there have been any way to spread out the total damage either over a larger time interval or over a greater radial distance?

We can somewhat control fires: we have a preventative measure -- public education and we have a cure -- firefighters. We can somewhat control floods: we have levees. We can't control tornadoes very well, though perhaps with some cloud seeding, we might be able to in the future.

But how does society mitigate the effects of earthquakes, especially in areas with very ancient architecture?

Comment Re:I run Debian, and I run FreeBSD. (Score 1) 425

FreeBSD
*is more secure (apparently, i don't know enough to be sure but they're development model and security results do tend to suggest this)

Citation needed. Also, their not they're.

*has zfs,

Btrfs, the response to ZFS, was merged into 2.6.29. If you really want ZFS, there is ZFS via FUSE, but since the start I've read of complaints regarding the slow performance.

*etc

If your other points aren't substantial, then you "etc" is meaningless.

Comment Re:Video games (Score 5, Funny) 33

Do you all want to be a parent of some soul-less little pokemon-playing faggot glued to a monitor during all of their waking hours? Do you want to teach them that escapism is an acceptable way to deal with life? Do you want your kid to be the overweight, friendless baby-talker who reads lame fantasy books all day? Do you want to raise somebody who will grow to be 300 pounds and who will want to live with you rent-free through their adulthood, urinating in a bucket they keep in their room and emerging only to ask for your money?

Yes. Like father, like son.

Comment Re:Regardless of whatever code in it is faulty (Score 5, Interesting) 465

Lines 122, 521, 690, 710, and 748 scare me; gotos in C code...

They've used one form of a goto that's actually quite readable and useful. Would you rather have:

if (condition1 && condition2) {
/* boilerplate code with a return */
}

if (issue1 || issue2) {
/* same repeated boilerplate code with a return */
}

or

if (condition1 && condition2) {
goto cleanup;
}

if (issue1 || issue2) {
goto cleanup;
}
cleanup:
/* just one instance of this code,
no need for duplication of efforts */
Believe it or not, there are useful reasons to use goto, and Microsoft happened to use goto for the right reason here. The Linux kernel also happens to use this practice to boost the readability of the code.

Comment Practice Fields? (Score 1) 73

The game field is coated with regolith, a slick polymer material, and special wheels are used to create a low-traction interaction with the crater's surface.

The article summary references regolith. Wikipedia defines regolith as:

[...] is a layer of loose, heterogeneous material covering solid rock. It includes dust, soil, broken rock, and other related materials [...]

I remember the days when I was a member of a FIRST robotics team and we prepared for competitions by building practice fields to test out our robot and help prepare our human players. The fields we constructed were of fairly stable objects like PVC tetrahedrons and fairly large kickballs that made it easy to simulate actual conditions in a real tournament. How are teams supposed to simulate actual conditions if the terrain is so unstable and chaotic?

Comment Re:Killing myself! (Score 1) 511

I would quit smoking if you'd find out how to cure Social Anxiety Disorder...

I don't mean to appear condescending, but have you tried exercise, specifically aerobic exercise? By try, I mean more than for a few weeks off-and-on. I'm certainly no doctor, but from my own experience, exercise releases endorphins which result in the so-called "runner's high." Not only will you be in better shape, but your fitness will boost your self-confidence and help you interact with other people more easily.

I like to stay away from modern medicine as much as possible because I've been burned by crummy doctors in the past. That's not to say I go with unproven homeopathic treatments either. I stick with what worked for our ancestors -- a good diet and plenty of exercise. Really, the geeky audience on Slashdot should make the connection between a biochemical machine like the human body and a electromechanical system like a computer. If you want optimal performance, it takes hard work. Drugs are an easy way out.

Spam

Submission + - Alan Ralsky Facing Indictment (freep.com)

zentec writes: "The US Attorney's Office has issued a press release stating that they are seeking indictment of Alan Ralsky, his son in-law and nine other people. Described as the bust of a major spam ring, the indictment was listed as one of "largest nationwide" for spamming. Besides Ralsky family members, it seeks individuals in California, Arizona, Russia and Hong Kong.

Ralsky has a reputation as being one of the most prolific and unapologetic spammers in the world."

Media

Journal SPAM: DRM Nightmare - Use HD and Lose Previously Purchased Media 7

Davis Freeberg ran into the nightmare scenario of losing access to his DRM-disabled purchases, simply by upgrading a PC monitor. "I recently purchased a new HD monitor, but when I installed it, I lost the streaming capabilities on Netflix's website. When I tried to troubleshoot the issue, I had to agree to let Netflix "reset my DRM" by destroying my Amazon.com files. Because Hollywood wants to punish people for using techn

Spam

Submission + - Spam King Alan Ralsky under indictment (freep.com)

maxx_entropy writes: Spam King Alan Ralsky under indictment

The U.S. Attorney's Office has scheduled a news conference today to announce the indictment of 11 people in a major Internet spam investigation.
It described the indictment as one of the largest nationwide.
Among the indicted are Alan Ralsky of West Bloomfield, his son-in-law and nine others. They were indicted in Detroit on charges of running an illegal Internet spam operation.

Movies

Submission + - When Movies Don't Live Up to the Trailer (nytimes.com) 1

MBCook writes: "David Pogue of the New York Times has published a piece in which he asks "Just how different can a trailer be without becoming false advertising?" He relates taking his children to see Nation Treasure: Book of Secrets, and just how amazingly different it is from the trailers. "On the way home, what [my children and I] discussed wasn't the plot or the shaky grasp of history. It was all the good stuff we'd seen in the trailers (the ads) that weren't even *in* the movie.""
Caldera

Submission + - Withdrawn SCO-York APA Reveals Irregularities (groklaw.net)

I Don't Believe in Imaginary Property writes: "Groklaw is reporting that there appear to be a number of irregularities in the hastily-drafted SCO-York Asset Purchase Agreement. The agreement, which was originally offered as an emergency plan to sell off all of SCO's assets and keep the liabilities, was ultimately withdrawn, but not without some last-second lawyering by creditors such as Novell. PJ notes that there are a number of highly unusual sections in the agreement, such as one explicitly giving force to oral agreements — something you only do if you want to hide part of the contract from prying eyes, especially when the contract's confidentiality portions survive its termination. Another irregularity is that the company they were going to sell the lawsuit to is specifically identified as being based in Delaware, but the rest was left blank, to be written in later. PJ speculates that SCO hoped to create a shell corporation to sell the lawsuit to so that they could continue litigating. Presumably, bankruptcy is merely a flesh wound to SCO."

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